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Show - - . I : I omm Complete Trial Needed To Legally Outlaw War By BAUKIIAGE . IVsms Antlpt tnj Commutator, c WX0 Service, 1611 Eye Street, N.W Washington, D, C-A C-A the Nuernberi trial draw to close, 1 continue to hear two que. tlons repeated ad Inflnltum In the market place and bazaars, in the coffee home and the couloirs (not to mention the lecture halls). On Is: Why on arts are they drsgging out these trials; aren't they ever going to end? The other Is: Do you think any of these fellows .,, (the prisoners) are going to get offt The Intelligence of the Question, ors and the number of times 1 bear the questions assure me that the tnain purposes of the trial are still Widely misunderstood.- Associate Justice Jackson know a well as anyone els that new from Nuernberg has long sine departed de-parted Inconspicuously from the front page. Be knows, from read tng the American newspaper which reach him not too belatedly, thank to the ALS (the army's special courier service), that hi role in the Nuernberg cast will never bring him succet de scandal. He know hi presence I needed in Washing, ton on the Supreme court bench In any case, he know that he I adding to bis fellow justices' bur dens, if not their annoyance by r maining away from the job. Certainly Cer-tainly he realize that time Is not increasing the prestige which bo undoubtedly achieved when' he en gineered the trials and mad his ringing . opening address. He has nothing io gain personally by remaining re-maining longer In that dreary, pulverized pul-verized Bavarian city. Why, then, does be tarryt Full Documentation It Required , , By answering that question, on can answer the other two I men tioned at the beginning of these One: Why Is tills' thing being dragged out forever. , , I Answer: Because this trial Is not merely a trial of a handful of inter national criminals. These evil villains vil-lains are only a small part of the drama, even If it is they, and not What la behind their castlgation, which sometimes still .produces headlines. The trial Is a great pro- : It Is the recording of history, for vm urai lunv ui luebuij, u& uujvui j written in blood, and ink hardly yet dry. It must be a complete record; rec-ord; the record of a crime which, until it is so recorded, may never be admitted aa a crime in the eyes of International .statesmen and lawyers. The Allied military tribunal (op. ration Justice, as it was known in the army) was planned, and is being be-ing conducted to its long and apparently appar-ently infinite end for the purpose of : blueprinting a legal precedent for holding as punishable criminals, the beads of statea who plot and carry out aggressive warfare, v v c . That Is the answer to question one. i Question two: Are they aver go-: go-: ing to convict these fellows? I answered an-swered that In cart when I aald that the proceedings were far more than the trials of the defend ants who sit dally in the prisoners dock of th court house at Nuernberg, Nuern-berg, or in their lonely cells near by. : AtiH tnr thnaa whn foar that tna. tlce will be cheated, let me say that : most of those men, If It cannot be established that they took official part In the planning and execution : of an aggressive war, are probably wanted on other charges in local I courts. If they go tree from Nuern berg, the local courta will try them. aa the "Beast of Belsen" and others oth-ers were tried and convicted for their separate and private crimes. : It is possible, for Instance, that the sadistic, degenerate Stretcher. Jew-baiting wlelder of a Jewelled Whip that was a symbol of bis psy chosis aa well aa an instrument of his perverse desire, will not be convicted con-victed by the IMT. He Is so low that his fellow prisoners ' won't speak to him; so crooked that even when he was a Gauleiter, he couldn't be trusted to sign a single order of national or international significance. He finally atole ao much from the Nazi party itself that be was Incarcerated, Colorado Gets Wheat King for Fourth Time in Last 5 Years Th Nuernberg trial will continue con-tinue until the record Is completed. Justice wiS not b cheated. And it 1 to be hoped that aggressive war, on th basis of th proceeding of this court, wIU become Illegal. How can the United Nation hop to outlaw out-law war unless they establish with word, scales and woolsack that war la ClegalT There is on war which will have my whole-hearted support though I hop It can be fought with brains nd without bloodshed. Such conflict was referred to recently a possibility by writer in th New Republic. Perhaps it wIU be, he says, "a inevitable was th Civil war within th United States." It would be In th nature of a civil war within th United Nation to establish th sovereignty sov-ereignty of th United Nations and preserve it unity, Just it wss necessary Jo establish th over-eignry over-eignry of th federal government of th United State and preserve th union. No other war 1 worth fighting because any other would merely be th continuation of all th sanguinary sanguin-ary struggle, unwanted by th people, peo-ple, for the power and th glory of ingle nation. see Wathlngton Hat Small Town Ait Out of the doors of th stlQ-unnn Ished cathedral which crowns Washington' highest hilt, through th court In gentle rain that set th yew to weeping and the young, leave ( of th privet ahlning In aqueous green, the solemn procession proces-sion moved. Th President and his entourage, the member of the Supreme Su-preme court th Cabinet, th congress, con-gress, and th others slipped away as th family of Chief Justice Harlan Har-lan Stone bore him gently to his last resting place in beautiful Bock Creek cemetery. Another great American had chosen the nation's capital where he served for two decades, his long, last home. -". . And I could not helo thinking of something J have said before In these columns Pennsylvania ave nue, from the capltol grounds to the Potomac, and past the Whit House; is only an extension of a thousand Main streets, which run : through th '"plaza." th "court house square.' or th "common, on past the First National bank and th opera house, the department (tore, and the tc cream parlor, to the free fields and woods beyond. So much a part of America is America's capital city, and o much a part, of Washington ar all th town and -titles clustered about their rivers, their main treets, their city halls, and post office, that when on long serve the nation here. It becomes his second home; often first in choice for hi declining declin-ing year and his last resting place. I am sure that former President and Chief Justice William Howard Taft loved hia native Ohio no less than- th federal city; hero the bridge upon which he could be seen taking hi daOy walk now bear hi name; he ilea in Arlington with Our other soldier dead, ' X know that retired Justlc Hughe lack no love or loyalty for the Empire state. Oliver Wendell Holme, deeply rooted to New England Eng-land aa he was, lived here, and when he died, bequeathed hi horn to the nation. These are but three of many who chos to live her when their duties no longer mad It necessary.- 1 There la something about Washington, Wash-ington, city virtually without Industries, In-dustries, or th other Institutions which make a metropolis, that bears th mark of small-town America. Washington is the only capital of great nation which la not that nation's metropolis. . There la also something else about this blg-llttl town which, for thousand of u Who follow Our humble waya here, make It home. My own prairies are a dear to me aa ever, and I never cease to thrill when I move serosa the border bor-der and over the fat black soil of Illinois; I have warm memories of th mists that blow in from th Pacific too; the hills and the lakelands lake-lands of western New York; New England's green-crested mountains and rocky coast where I have been more than a transient guest : But I can well understand how those who have moved along the quiei avenuea of this city, whose vlstaa run far back into the begin-nings begin-nings of American history, choose this city beside the broad Potomac aa their, final home. By W. J. DRYDEN WNO rtm Salter. ' While a new Unlteil States Wheat King has been crowned, the state of Colorado- still retains Its place as the home of quality wheat. For the fourth time In five years, the Pills-bury Pills-bury award has been given to ft wheat producer of Colorado. Luther F. Given, . sterling, v Colo., walked off with first honor t th wheat contest held recently t Chicago. Bis entry was Wichita wheat, a strain developed at th agricultural experiment station. University of Colorado; The Wichita wheat entered in the eontest by Given Giv-en was of th hard red winter variety va-riety which had test weight of 64.1 pounds. Th standard weight of bushel of wheat is 60 pounds. The-contest, held under the direction direc-tion of the International Crop Improvement Im-provement association and the various vari-ous stat agricultural experiment station and colleges, had for its Judge Prof. E. F. Crlm, Univer-aity Univer-aity of Minnesota; Prof. J. C Hack-leman, Hack-leman, University of Illinois; and Pro! A. I Clapp, Kansas Stat sgrlcultur college. Pro! K. E. Beeson of Purdue university represented repre-sented th co-operating organizations. organiza-tions. Given operate an 80-acr farm, raise hay, sugar beets, Hereford cattle and bogs. Hi wife, Lena, raise chickens. They bsv no children. chil-dren. Both ar equestrians, having fin saddle horses, and ar leaders BARBS ...by Daukh age The prophets of business say We're in for a boom, everything's all right. It'a always a nice trip up. What effect will the CIO-AFT. battle bat-tle to organize the south have on ' the consumer? Will they grow to the point where the innocent by-stand-er starts to attract the flying brickbats, brick-bats, as usual? Maybe the inflation can be checked enough so that it doesn't blow the balloon of prosperity apart before a gentler landing can be arranged. An almost human canine on a leash is better than an almost porcine por-cine human on the loose. There are plenty of both around. In. Sterling saddle club. Some 13 acre of the farm wss devoted to the development of th Wichita train of wheat Second place in the national contest con-test went to R. E. Condon, Platte-ville, Platte-ville, Colo, with bard red spring wheat with tost weight of 64.S pounds per bushel, winning th national na-tional reserve award, Other winners. Include D. F. Sak-uth, Sak-uth, Yuba City, Calif,.- for raising the best hard white wheat; Ralph Osborn, Culver, Ind., for best spring red wheat; Appleton Brothers, Can-ndalgua, Can-ndalgua, N. Y., best aott white wheat; and William Frazen, Mapes, N. D. - The contest was established In 1941. Since that time Colorado wheat ha four times taken the national na-tional honors, while Montana grain one haa scored first Former Colo-rado Colo-rado winners were George Hof-mann. Hof-mann. Biff; Leo Llhdstrom, Sterling; Ster-ling; and Jesse Powers, Henderson. The Montana winner war L. E. Peterson, Victoria, the winner in 1941. f;'f s I: m 1 'it j WHEAT KINO ... of the United States. Luther F. Givena is Iwwi holding- a, sheaf of Wichita wheat, with a sample of the threshed "grain nearby. The trophy he won in the competition is also shown. The winning- wheat was produced en hi SO-acre farm southeast of Sterling, Logan county, Colorado .,- ? Some Surplus Goods And Land Available To Fanners of D. S. WASHINGTON. War Assets corporation, cor-poration, new agency handling surplus sur-plus war property, has announced there will be no strictly agricultural equipment declared surplus, although al-though certain types of equipment such as tractor and' trucks may be converted to farm use. - The corporation has made plan to establish a small organization within th department of agriculture agricul-ture to handle surplus goods which may interest the farmer. Here are some fact which may Interest fanners. At latest count there were still aom 70,00 acre of anrplns farm land eat of an erlgi-nal erlgi-nal 100,00ft acres, for aalet there to no barb wire, the demand exceeding exceed-ing the supply by about IS to 1; there ia a Jiemp and flax mill formerly for-merly operated-by CCC at Hartford, Wis., for sale; a large quantity of telephone fend telegraph material la being offered and 1 at depots of U. S. signal corps In Chicago; Lexington, Lex-ington, Ky.t Ogdcn,' Utah; Atlanta Atlan-ta Ga. and BeUmead, N, J. Born and Lived 71 Years cn Sane Farm FAIRMONT. MINN. - When th Fairmont Dally Sentinel got to wondering won-dering who had lived the longest time on the same farm in this lo cality, Mrs, E. G. Swansoa of Dun-nell Dun-nell did a little investigating and discovered that: - r: l ' Ellsworth Ziemer still lives on the Lake Fremont farm where he was born in 1893; C L. Peterson still farms the place where he was born in 1890; but top honors go to F, S. E. Carlson, who was born December, Decem-ber, 1874, on a farm near DunnelL and still lives there with his wife and aon, making over 71 yeara on the same farm, , ; ' Champ Potato Grower HARRISBURG, PA.-By ; producing produc-ing 658 bushels of potatoes on a measured acre, Mervln Hanes of Stewardstown became Pennsyl vania's champion potato grower for 1945. "Th award was mad to Hanes by th growers' co-operative at a dinner held for him in Harris-burg. BUNNER-UP . , . for title el "wheat king" went to R. E. Cos-don, Cos-don, riattovUle, Colo. This Is the second year since 1941 that a Colorado Col-orado grain grower won the national na-tional reserve award. Hia hard red spring Wheat weighed 4.8 pounds per bushel more than the standard weight of wheat. Indian Fighter Dies at Tulsa; His Age, 105 TULSA, OKLA. During bis life, six wars were fought He knew personally per-sonally such historical characters ss General Custer, Geronimo, the Indian In-dian Apache chief, and Jesse James, the outlaw. He recently died here at the age of 105, William Franklin Knight, who observed ob-served hi 105th birthday last February Feb-ruary 17, was born on a steamboat at Louisiana, Mo. He went to Texas Tex-as in i860 as an advance guard tor stage coaches. Later he rode for the WeUs-Fargo express from St Louis west He was wounded four times by bullet and once when Comanche Indians pierced his neck with ar row la September, . 1870, after the Comanche had burned telegraph wire between two cities. Knight rode from Fort Worth to El Paso, carrying government messages. He used 33 horses on the trip and slept only two hours during the five days it took. In the early seventies, when buffalo buf-falo roamed the southwest plains country, Knight shipped as many as 10 000 buffalo hides at one time to eastern markets. Knight moved to Tulsa In 1918 and was employed by a local transfer company. He worked until he was 99 years of age before retiring. He kept house tor himself until forced to enter a convalescent home because be-cause of infirmities.. No Immediate relatives have been located. Woman Alone on Island 15 Days Saved by Guard Telltof Wreck of Ship in Which Her Husband and Friend Perished. ejswiawBB.wa - f LOS ANGELES. -A 43-year-old wnman. rescued bv the coast guard after twi weeks on an uninhabited Island off the Southern California coast, told of a shipwreck in which her husband and a fnena presumably presum-ably perished. Mrs. Bemice Brown, Van Nuys, Calif., was rescued by a coast guard crash boat She was taken from rocky Anacapa lslandV-25 miles west of Santa Monica, after her daughter, daugh-ter, Mrs. Maxine Trader, reported her parents were five day overdue from a fishing trip. Saw Signal Fire-Sighting Fire-Sighting the signal fire she had kept burning on the beach for nine days, coastguardsmen returned Mrs. Brown to Fort Hueneme, Calif., where navy doctors said she had recovered sufficiently to be taken borne. " She told of setting out March 1 with her husband, Roy Brown, 42, and John Barta, 38, Long Beach. They had expected to return March 11 or 12. The next day the boat ran into a gale which whipped up huge rollers that flooded the engine room. "We cast off in a small skiff," she said. "A wave washed my husband hus-band overboard He grabbed the tkiff but it capsized. "When I came up, I managed to swim to the fishing boat which was now swamped and got on the bow. A huge wave washed me away as though I was a fly. When I came up again, bom Roy and Johnny were gone." Grabs Gas Drums-Mrs. Drums-Mrs. Brown said she sighted two floating gas drums, one of which the grasped. The sharp edges cut iter hands to the bone. All afternoon and until nightfall she clung to the drum until it was washed close to a rock on which the took rjefuge. She lay there semiconscious semi-conscious until the morning of March 4 when she swam 300 yards to Anacapa island and found a hut stocked with emergency rations, ap parently established by the navy. For the next four days, Mrs. Brown said, she was barely able to move enough to obtain food, but an March 8 she was able to build the first of her signal fires. Several boats passed without lighting her fire, she said, and she was becoming worried about her !ood supplies when rescue arrived. NhU. ''IV- 1 irw r tfTSVM Classified Begrk. WB Buiiir: ' Office Furniture. FHei. rtLl , log Machines. Safe, Tyftitt J SALT IAKE DESKrV'S SS Waal r.rtw.JEttSANtf ' " Cu,, h One-Third of U. S. Population Has Ho Access to Libraries WASHINGTON. Two salons have stated that almost one-third of the people of the .United States, or "more than 35,000,000. persons, nearly all of them in rural areas, have no access to libraries." i T 1 Because of that situation, the lawmakers, Sen. Lister Hill of Alabama Ala-bama and Hep. Emily Taft Doug-la Doug-la of Illinois, bav Introduced identical iden-tical bill simultaneously: in -the hous and senate calling for annual federal grants of $25,000 to; each tat tor us of state library association asso-ciation in rural areas. ; The bill also empowers state to provide additional funds up to maximum of $50,000 annually for such work, which the federal government govern-ment would match. - ' While no federal control jot administration ad-ministration is involved, annual report re-port would be called-for and states would qualify for funds by preparing prepar-ing plan and submitting them to th United States commissioner of education. j, : Th statistics show there are 686 Counties without any public library service. The greatest number. 150 counties, are in Texas Kentucky is second with a counties with -no library, and Louisiana and Mississippi Missis-sippi are third, with 35 counties each. J In only 11 states does every county coun-ty have a publi library. They are Connecticut, Delaware, Iowa. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island and Vermont. O Osage Ranchers to Hold Meet in June PAWHUSKA, OKLA. The 10th annual convention of the Osage Cattlemen Cat-tlemen association, an event known throughout th Southwest, ha been scheduled for June 21 and 22, It has been announced by Gartner Gart-ner Drummond, president of th association. as-sociation. Held In th heart of a famous bluegrass pastureland, th meeting will feature barbecue nda Sow-boy Sow-boy dance. This year a large ai tendance is expected when cattlemen cattle-men from several surrounding state will bear expert on modern ranching methods. - ' 2 There is one fly la the ointment, however, and President Drurnmond is scratching his head for an an swer, wun a much larger attendance at-tendance than ever bafor expected, nnaing , aumcient accommodations is developing into a major problem. The hospitality of this community has never failed in the past, and Drummond is banking on the neigh-borliness neigh-borliness of Pawhuska more than ever, be admits. Anyway, cattlemen can bunk most any place if they uavi VJ Asjuuimuuul oiaiea. : Servieemea found sevea wild papples near Holly, wood, brought them te caa- teea ae they weald have a Attends Wife's Funeral, Sailor Jailed as A.W.O.L WALNUT CREEK. CALIF. A aavy mother has disclosed he son aad written he was servings 60-day tentence in the guardhouse at New London, Conn., tor attending his wife's funeral without official authority. Mrs. Ruby Adams said her son. Jack, 20. as a coxswain and a veteran vet-eran of the Normandy landings and numerous Atlantic convoys, had murted Miss Marian Hagerty of Roxbury, Mass., for the-Tast year. On January 14 he was informed that she was critically in and would p-obably die. He married her and Jiree days later she died. Mrs. Adams said Jack wrote he requested permission to attend his sride'a funeral Permission was denied de-nied but he attended the rites any. way. A court-martial and a 60-day tentence followed. At the New London submarine oase a public relatione officer said te could not give out any information. informa-tion. , - Leaps Froni Moving Bu To Save Life of Child CLEARFIELD. PA.-In a dramat. K, split-second rescue. Jama R. 3may, 18, snatched two-year-old France J. Painter to safety from th path of an oncoming freight train rven though he had to jump from s bus and, sprint 100 yards to make The boy, son of Mr. and Mr: . nond Smay of Clearfield, R, d. L as riding in the school bus near er when on of hia companions taw the little girl on the tracka .. die train approached. . 'Gilbert Bloonv bus driver, slowed n bus and asked Jam if t.. bought he could reach th rtrt t. lme. Crying "Yes,! the boy leaped xom the bus before It came to a itandstiE. ,B The little girl dauehtP i. ind Mr. George painter of nearby1 aogback, bad wandered from her wuy.n lew minute earlier, ,. Reveal Plot to Fire U. S. Depot in London LONDON.--U. S. military authori-ies authori-ies asked ScoUand Yard to.heln nvestigate an alleged plot to fire .:U ,rmy Pcial aervices ecboo offices and depot, which oc juples four floors of a London de-jartraent de-jartraent store. - The authorities said " that L,rEe wanUties of moUon picture film had een unreeled In the store room sec- VnA0 inaammabIe materl-ds materl-ds had been distributed. Fire ex-inguisher. ex-inguisher. on three floor, occu-ied occu-ied by the secUon were emptied md many of them were smashed. Released by. Western Newspaper Union, ARMY-NAVY UNIFICATION SHOULD START AT ONCE " . WASHINGTON. Mr. Truman made the- proper move to get -his army-navy unification bill through congress. THe navy nad performed an all-out lobbying job againsi me program. It wa in charg of Navy Assistant Secretary H. Strove Hen-sel Hen-sel who worked ttrough the Navy League promoting apeeches and articles by admirals, and arousing naval affairs committeemen in both house. H Mr. Truman succeeds in stopping navy agitation, he will get hi bill through fcecause there la no other oppositionexcept that which may be continued by the naval committeemen who fear they may lose their seniority standing in their committeeobs. But the bill is not on the program tor this ses sion. Th calendar of both bouse ia already crowded tor the next several months, and the leader ar planning a summer recess to. let the legislator go. home and mend their broken fences in preparation tor their re-election campaigns. The navy never had much of a case. No one can oppose unification as a theory. Appalling duplications of army and navy services ruled the- committee record of hearings. Army and navy competed with each other In bidding for such things as clothing, tor example. In that line, one service might have a surplus of some, items while the other Dad a cenciency. In negotiating their separate contracts, con-tracts, they were actively compet ing against each other. Then again on small islands like Guam, there would be a naval hospital constructed construct-ed and maintained - a mile away from an army hospital. It was shown also that in armament the navy and army encountered need less conflict Furthermore, the building of separate airports around the world caused duplication waste in many instances. NAVAL DELAYING ACTION In the face of such overwhelming evidence, the navy centered its camnaien larselv unnn: ifolavln e. tion by congress. Its basic tear and claim waa that the navv was to he put, under the army by unification wuicn pimpiy is, nov irue.,.ine Thomas subcommittee haa renort. ed now u bill which proposes to set up the unification this way: A sin gle secretary of common defense in the Cabinet, with three) aecrptarip under him, one each for army, air ana navy; then an over-all chief of staff with a recommendation that the President rotate this officii he. tween the three services, giving it to army lor a year, then to air and then to navvl. thrpa assistant aei. retarie representing each branch 01 tne service, and finally legaliza tion 01 the Joint chiefs of staff set UD during the war to erovide eo. operation in strategy between the services. . , ' ; This,! setun nreservea th tiaw aa lust a much an Independent unit as me army or the air forces.' It does not put the navy Under the army. But it ia true th armv. numerically, is stronger, and may wieia a greater influence In the combined department than the admiral ad-miral or air arm, despite the legal equality of each branch Delay in enacting the program until next year will ereatlv Imnmta efficiency in national defense. Even u we legislation could be enacted today, at least a year or more would, be required to work out and effect the vast details of reorganiza von, .. - c While the Soviet seems to hi leisurely withdrawing- ltd rhimar army from Iran, it is leaving behind be-hind political arm Which ha an excellent chance of absorbing the country, a Britain and the U. S have no armies on the eromuf . mm. tary or political. Next possible Russian move may be to cut the nearest slice of Turkey already defined in the official Mos cow Journals. ; This is a thin slice running about 200 miles westward in- length along the Black sea with a depth of 75 to 100 miles inland. The Turks Could not itnn aurh a move-without naval assistance from the British or U. S. Their frontier armies could easily be by-passed by Russian amphibious landings in their rear. "v ' , . A late grapevine report to trustworthy trust-worthy authorities here Indicates Russia is in no condition to try this, or any other major venture. . Hei casualty list from the war has not yet been published and no one knows how many ahe lost : Russia's manpower ahortage hai been made acute by critical short tages of farm tractors, locomotives and trucks to an extent where she cannot hope to supply her peopl with food and necessities. Economists noted Stalin's goali for-the fourth Five Year plan, tc end in 1950, were lower than his I94i goals in pig Iron, steeL oil, locomo tives, freight 'cars, paper, leathei and some other phases. In short, his figures suggest he will fall short of prewar production after fom more years if figures can be trust ed. Just received carlotdof gj!-'v $128.00 POULTRY, CmCKsTrT d"ck U breeds. SEEDS, PLANTS; ETC. Tomato, Cabbage, Onl. r.T also onion aeed. Send for -.i. SUa r laat raiojKgr Buy U. S. Savings C Kipo'suiimm 'Cef H'SuUma SOUS e scfe Heels text time yttht shoes repaired. UPHILL or down: 1 r...- Aa PIOBOHOsMi-W-vint uxtfiwj e.io. mi "J," , cet25 box yrpf OUILDUPPiD TO GET MORE J -' If your blood LACKS I, Tou girls and women who tlmpla anemia that rou Rj. -dragged out"-tuUmyW du. est blood-iron Wnl 1 youo" aU drugatores. Worth aaaaamamBVBBBBBBBH-V 1 m APPLICATOR rmW: SHAKES SLACK P-te"' LEAF 40 GO Wtl , I J MUCH FAHTMU. JTJi Buy only m ttotorrme lull .tnngrn Andio"""" 7- w un to sra viX when the WiJJJ, eida aa otbat " blood. tttfi rfa.um.ti vtfX' pttinc ap J.- other iignth?d?. There iW tki" treatment to 2 bett BMieine " -jo'6"" G et tod |